For Spanish language in the metro there are two AMers (1360 out of Tacoma and 1210 out of the south county) and a couple FMs -- one a rimshot (102.9), the other one more of a rimshot (99.3). Point taken, though. Three Country stations seems like overkill. My gut is that one of the three will disappear in a couple years.I'm not in the market but Nielsen shows a larger population of Hispanic than Black, and no Spanish language stations at all. But I guess the focus group research came back saying the hole in the market is for three Country stations when it could previously not support two? Shrug.
Three Country stations seems like overkill. My gut is that one of the three will disappear in a couple years.
KPNW's HD3 is the VSIN Sports Betting Talk network. I wonder if they make any money off of that?
VSiN pays for clearances, so yes Hubbard makes money off of it.Since you can't even sports bet in WA (illegal), probably zip-a-dee-do-dah. AKA, nothin'.
At least when it came on the air, I think Hubbard sold an exclusive sponsorship to Tulalip. Actually not a bad idea to monetize an HD channelVSiN pays for clearances, so yes Hubbard makes money off of it.
I think it was all about carving out their own lane in a format nobody was touching (thus having a segment of the market all to themselves). Honestly it was not a bad idea, it just didn’t pay off the way they intended.Why did they flip from country in the first place?
I’m not sure it would ever happen, but I could definitely see it being a good idea. A lot of their programming is already knocking on the door of AAA anyway. Give listeners the chance to listen to something that isn’t trying to be hipster and weird, and let the listeners decide if it should ultimately continue in that direction or not.I've often thought if KBCS needed to do something that broadened appeal and fundraising, making the format a more consistent Triple A in prime dayparts could be a good strategy. The appeal of their programming in general seems a bit more "upper demo" than KEXP.
Note that I'm not saying they need to, just a thought. I do think you could build a non-commercial station with more traditional Triple A artists and rotations and the talents of Fisher, Collins, etc.
KMPS lasted a really long time as country stations, too. KMPS actually started out on the AM band in 1975. They added the FM in 1978 and since they stayed in the country format until late 2017, that means that KMPS had an almost 40 year run at 94.1.FYI Seattle is a market that once supported three stations. Including one that called itself Young Country.
KMPS, KRPM, and KYCY. So this is nothing new.
But then again, someone thought the market could support two AAA stations.